Bolivian President Evo Morales on Christmas Eve pardoned 1,800 prisoners held in facilities across the country—part of his ongoing effort to curtail overcrowding in the Andean nation's penal system. "The present decree's aim is to give amnesty and total or partial pardons to people who have been deprived of their liberty," Morales told a news conference in the central region of Cochabamba. Those pardoned include inmates with sentences of less than five years, one-time offenders, prisoners under the age of 28, single mothers with children (generally incarcerated along with them), prisoners with terminal illnesses, and some with disabilities. Since those convicted of violent crimes and trafficking were excluded, the majority were almost certainly low-level drug offenders. This is the fourth time Morales has decreed such mass pardons. It is estimated that 15,000 individuals remain incarcerated in Bolivia, with a population of 10 million. A third of these have not actually been sentenced.
A November report by the Cochabamba-based Andean Information Network warned that prison overcrowding is at critical levels in Bolivia. The prison system has well surpassed 250% of total capacity, the report warned. It finds that Bolivia has the fifth worst over-crowding situation in Latin America after Haiti, El Salvador, Guatemala and Venezuela. Much of the blame is placed with Bolivia's widespread use of pre-trial detention—the country is found to have Latin America's second-highest rate of this practice after El Salvador. Bolivia's prison population has nearly doubled since 2008—with some some 20% of those incarcerated during this period having been convicted on drug-related charges.
While the pardons are an encouraging step, the problems they are meant to address are deeply entrenched across the region. Such factors have led to a growing wave of prison violence throughout Latin America.
Cross-post to High Times and Global Ganja Report
Deadly repression of prison uprising in Bolivia
Seven inmates were killed in a notoriously overcrowded prison in Bolivia on March 14, when police stormed the penitentiary. About 2,000 officers raided Palmasola facility in Santa Cruz before dawn. The move followed a prison uprising by inmates to protest new restrictions on visits by family members. More than 5,200 people are held in Palmasola, but only a few hundred have been sentenced. The others are awaiting trial. (BBC News)